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Dec 15, 2014
12/14
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you asked about religion. i tend generally not to do a lot of cartoon mocking religions because to me religion is so obviously stupid that there's no need to make fun of it and i don't find such jokes funny, but that's just me personally. but that's my rule. i think i'm a little more out there than most of my editorial cartoonists, collects, especially those with working newspapers. >> and also the international cartoonists who have to live in the front line. they are more often have to be more wary. good example, pakistani cartoonist who come his newspaper which was i think the hindu times was attacked seven times i taliban over the years. one time his editor was ambushed and his driver killed. the cartoonist will now probably not do cartoons for that newspaper anymore because the newspaper has to be so careful about what it says that they wouldn't be able to print cartoons that he would be able to speak freely with his opinions were. so then he goes online. a lot of cartoonists who are finding that their voi
you asked about religion. i tend generally not to do a lot of cartoon mocking religions because to me religion is so obviously stupid that there's no need to make fun of it and i don't find such jokes funny, but that's just me personally. but that's my rule. i think i'm a little more out there than most of my editorial cartoonists, collects, especially those with working newspapers. >> and also the international cartoonists who have to live in the front line. they are more often have to...
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Mar 22, 2014
03/14
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so not only as we define its but their religion is based on that. there is a fascinating sections that kids are playing little league baseball and tell they want to win but you cannot be competitive. but they are among the poorest groups because they don't want to be successful in that way. >> certain cultures where striping is considered wrong there is a religious support it is considered sinful. if you look at the tv white protestant society is not sinful but something you would not want to to show you were interested to climb >> although the original work ethic. >> but i am talking the 20th century. in these cultures they lack the element as we define it. they teach to have security with their traditional practices. so feeling you are not good enough ian you have to do more. so you should feel pretty enough. similarly in a different way , privileged whites they don't have to prove themselves but with both cases talk about eaton college they have superiority and also impulse control being exercised. >> but no insecurity.
so not only as we define its but their religion is based on that. there is a fascinating sections that kids are playing little league baseball and tell they want to win but you cannot be competitive. but they are among the poorest groups because they don't want to be successful in that way. >> certain cultures where striping is considered wrong there is a religious support it is considered sinful. if you look at the tv white protestant society is not sinful but something you would not...
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Aug 11, 2014
08/14
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the religion of jesus, a after all was at last a malignant corrupting influence. bonhoeffer had long argued that christianity and judaism were inseparable. and they and, the nazis would agree although with a grotesquely different verse. the anti-semitic journal to shermer ran a cartoon of a jewish man raising the head of the christian cleric over his head. there is no question of his race. he is an angular attenuated nose and his bloated form is but for a crest with the star of david. he has also a telling cloven hosts. the church the caption reads under good protection. bonhoeffer would continue to write from new york in fretful revelatory burst, i know longer know why i am here. i cannot believe it is god's will that i should stay on here. i cannot make out why i have calm. when the new visiting scholar first opened the doors of unions profits chamber at the start of the fall semester he would be taken aback by the mass which no one had yet bothered to clean up after the prior tenant. an ashtray on the desk overflowed with cigarette stubs and burned matches, cru
the religion of jesus, a after all was at last a malignant corrupting influence. bonhoeffer had long argued that christianity and judaism were inseparable. and they and, the nazis would agree although with a grotesquely different verse. the anti-semitic journal to shermer ran a cartoon of a jewish man raising the head of the christian cleric over his head. there is no question of his race. he is an angular attenuated nose and his bloated form is but for a crest with the star of david. he has...
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Mar 10, 2014
03/14
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and the result -- religion. and, i mean, hats off to them. there's a fascinating section where some of their kids are playing little league baseball, and that's fine until some of them start seeming like they want to win. you can't be competitive. but, no, for obvious reasons they are among the poorest groups in the united states because they don't want to be successful in that way. >> guest: well, it's interesting, there's certain cultures where striving is considered wrong. so there's a religious basis for it in amish culture. of it's considered sinful. if you look at elite white protestant society, a surgeon time -- certain time and place striving was not considered sinful, but gauche or it's something that you wouldn't want to show at least that you were interested in climbing. >> guest: although they had the original work ethic. >> guest: yeah, no many. sure, i'm talking about a mid 20th century. now, in these cultures what we're saying is that they lack the element of insecurity as we define it. so the amish are teaching their kids to f
and the result -- religion. and, i mean, hats off to them. there's a fascinating section where some of their kids are playing little league baseball, and that's fine until some of them start seeming like they want to win. you can't be competitive. but, no, for obvious reasons they are among the poorest groups in the united states because they don't want to be successful in that way. >> guest: well, it's interesting, there's certain cultures where striving is considered wrong. so there's a...
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May 26, 2014
05/14
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. >> host: they are talking about these people that know too little and rely on the religion, evangelicals do nothing, no nothing voters and the like and tell thomas comes out and what works is why do you send kids off to these schools like harvard, yale, princeton, stanford and the like use a smart parents even if they are called to do nothing shouldn't be sending their kids to those schools the governor in new york and the new york city mayor. they have a major rivalry with this woman named moskowitz who is a big proponent of it. now, andrew into speech it was a remarkable speech if he would show me the words and you did and taught me who said if i would say that it would be delivered by a conservative republican. we spend more money in new york state than anywhere else on public education and yet he said that we are number 32 in the nation in terms of achievement and math and reading and other essentials that everybody would agree are required to make anything out of your life so he's saying we have to have a school choice in this area. what i'm saying in the universities is some of my
. >> host: they are talking about these people that know too little and rely on the religion, evangelicals do nothing, no nothing voters and the like and tell thomas comes out and what works is why do you send kids off to these schools like harvard, yale, princeton, stanford and the like use a smart parents even if they are called to do nothing shouldn't be sending their kids to those schools the governor in new york and the new york city mayor. they have a major rivalry with this woman...
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Mar 23, 2014
03/14
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and it is really where religion and power come together russia. it is also where corruption is on blatant display. it bit -- the cathedral as a room that it runs out for events. it has a car wash in the cathedral. it is home to the -- to some sort of cathedral foundation or a lot of money goes in and the money comes out. so it is all that. it is the perfect symbol of russian state. and there is -- the song of the row was called upon fair. it has to refrains. one is mother of god chase poohed now. another one is solely ship, ship, ship which is what do you them singing in that little bit. that is also the reason that -- on much of the television watching public in russia firmly believes that they went into church and defecated. >> you also said that the press was terrible and lied. >> wait. let's separate. there is the state media. at the time we still have a little bit of independent media. the independent media were terrific. 98 percent of russian households can state tv. and that is their main source separation. as i said, the majority of russia
and it is really where religion and power come together russia. it is also where corruption is on blatant display. it bit -- the cathedral as a room that it runs out for events. it has a car wash in the cathedral. it is home to the -- to some sort of cathedral foundation or a lot of money goes in and the money comes out. so it is all that. it is the perfect symbol of russian state. and there is -- the song of the row was called upon fair. it has to refrains. one is mother of god chase poohed...
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Mar 16, 2014
03/14
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they don't have -- but only to did not have insecurity as we define it, their religion is based on that and the result is there's a fascinating section or some other the kids i played little league baseball and that's fine until some of them start singing like they want to win. they can be competitive. for obvious reasons they are among the poorest groups because they don't want to be successful in that way. >> host: it's interesting because there's certain schedules the amish cultures considered in full. if you like a delete white protestant society at a certain kind of place, strain it was not in full but at some and that you wouldn't want to show that you are interested in claiming. >> host: the original work ethic. >> host: kentucky mid-20th century. but we are saying is they lack the elements of insecurity as we define it. the amish are teaching their kids to find security in their faith and their traditional practices. so here's an insecurity is your feeling you're not us. you have to do more. they teach their kids no, you should feel good enough for the simple things we have. sim
they don't have -- but only to did not have insecurity as we define it, their religion is based on that and the result is there's a fascinating section or some other the kids i played little league baseball and that's fine until some of them start singing like they want to win. they can be competitive. for obvious reasons they are among the poorest groups because they don't want to be successful in that way. >> host: it's interesting because there's certain schedules the amish cultures...
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Jul 1, 2014
07/14
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religion until the so. pretty quiet. how many insurgents to you think we killed? platoon size elements. what? platoon size? hq i don't have platoons. why do you think we need the old and battery. we didn't? each gun only fired two rounds. they just wanted us all to have gone time on an actual target. even one round would be enough to take out a platoon in the open desert. it was fun. he shakes his head slowly. platoon sized element he says again. that is what it was. two rounds per gun was what we need to take it out. i didn't mean a whole battery, are gone. how many did our gun, just our gun kill? , i suppose to know? platoon sizes like 40. figure 6 pounds, devise six, i don't know, and just over six people per gun. yap. we killed exactly six and have people. sanchez takes out a notebook as those doing the math and a stretching out his numbers. / nine marines on the gun and you personally have killed zero. seven something people to date. just like a torso and head columbia torso and head. that's not funny. we definitely got more. we are the best shots in the batt
religion until the so. pretty quiet. how many insurgents to you think we killed? platoon size elements. what? platoon size? hq i don't have platoons. why do you think we need the old and battery. we didn't? each gun only fired two rounds. they just wanted us all to have gone time on an actual target. even one round would be enough to take out a platoon in the open desert. it was fun. he shakes his head slowly. platoon sized element he says again. that is what it was. two rounds per gun was what...
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Apr 13, 2014
04/14
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you have people with different backgrounds and religions in the race. i'm not opposed to that idea. i think it's a good thing however what are they being taught and if it violates the faith in the values and beliefs of the significant number of people who are paying through their taxes for this they have to be able to have the choice of sending their child to another school public-private religious that reflects those views. i believe that's going to improve the public schools is like anything else -- host coaches for a second let's take a moment here and say he means challenging orthodoxies is that having those children learn how to think critically? >> guest: they need to think critically. i'm not thinking critically all the time. i'm exposed to all kinds of ideas that only in the newspaper that i write but the billboards i see all the time but look you have a child you have to train them properly. you have to get him to the point where they can make a critical decision. you have to have a foundation a belief and purpose for living and it might just here to get an education to mak
you have people with different backgrounds and religions in the race. i'm not opposed to that idea. i think it's a good thing however what are they being taught and if it violates the faith in the values and beliefs of the significant number of people who are paying through their taxes for this they have to be able to have the choice of sending their child to another school public-private religious that reflects those views. i believe that's going to improve the public schools is like anything...
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Apr 20, 2014
04/14
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. >> this are interested in the religion in russian life. from what i understood in the soviet union was not a very active church. some of this is church centered and you mentioned the use of russian orthodox church that they chose the church. could you talk more about the place of russian culture? >> that's exactly the right way to phrase the question. it's the place of the church in russian culture because it's not the role of belief in god, but is traditionally the russian orthodox church has served at the pleasure of bizarre and later the other dictators who came. in the soviet period, divided the churches were destroyed. a lot of monasteries were destroyed or repurpose and most clergy weren't allowed. the ones who were worked for the kgb. in times of crisis, the government always relied on the church in for example during world war ii and saw not this defense effort, he very much describes the church into the mobilization effort in for a while there were even chaplains in the red army. basically the same thing has happened over the last
. >> this are interested in the religion in russian life. from what i understood in the soviet union was not a very active church. some of this is church centered and you mentioned the use of russian orthodox church that they chose the church. could you talk more about the place of russian culture? >> that's exactly the right way to phrase the question. it's the place of the church in russian culture because it's not the role of belief in god, but is traditionally the russian...
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Nov 10, 2014
11/14
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and i would say faith has hijacked religion. >> host: with that strong component of religion you mention a competition between groups election where extreme competition or with those extremely competitive folks but i got the sense and if on the surface to be to the human with that effort with that moral discussion that is centered in religion with that tribalism and and what is outmoded so to feel those moral issues or do we move past that? and it is not as strongly steeped in that tribal competition and. >> the goal of religion with self understanding you touched on an area where science and the humanities could actually come together in a meaningful way that is how we bring science and the amenities together. what do we mean by self understanding? meaning in this case is to go past history with the origin of literacy. but then on into prehistory with the lives and activities that give rise to the modern human species but then to go beyond that to the evolutionary process that drove the origins of humans species and the way i put that is that history means nothing without pre-history. b
and i would say faith has hijacked religion. >> host: with that strong component of religion you mention a competition between groups election where extreme competition or with those extremely competitive folks but i got the sense and if on the surface to be to the human with that effort with that moral discussion that is centered in religion with that tribalism and and what is outmoded so to feel those moral issues or do we move past that? and it is not as strongly steeped in that tribal...
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Apr 20, 2014
04/14
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i found increasingly a lot of the extremists within the religion don't and they have a responsibility and isolate people who feel that way. >> host: what comes through in the book is this kind of discouraged view about what islam, especially muslims in america are up to. the question is how would you do with this? disc of the government has the primary responsibility and from what we know they are doing with it. they are modifying the radical mosques. tony blair tried to deport those who are preaching hate from some of the mosque. the insurrection who wanted to bring down the government. he tried to deport them, disconnect it with some of the extremists who went out and killed people. you had the subway bombing in britain 77. but he was constrained by their version of the aclu and it came to the point where he was unable to deport any of them. we want everybody to come to america under the law in an orderly fashion, but we used to people of the irish, the polls, the the germans, others who came and assimilated. they loved america. they love their history. now we all hyphenated america
i found increasingly a lot of the extremists within the religion don't and they have a responsibility and isolate people who feel that way. >> host: what comes through in the book is this kind of discouraged view about what islam, especially muslims in america are up to. the question is how would you do with this? disc of the government has the primary responsibility and from what we know they are doing with it. they are modifying the radical mosques. tony blair tried to deport those who...
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Jan 13, 2014
01/14
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i take a lot of solis and religion. sometimes i do most of my riding at five in the morning and i like to think that whole idea happens before sunrise. week up and try and work basically. if i don't get up to necessarily engage in prayer i still get up and engage in some sort of work and if it isn't my work as a writer media is my work in preparation even maintaining a healthy body and going out to the park and running, or may be preparing a meal for my children. i know that so many mothers do that. so if they live in action and practiced in life but that is my trees and i respect other people's choice that he who believes in god, human beings that believe in god have good deeds and nothing to fear, so salvation is really in be leaving the connection that you have and also doing good deeds. it's really your way to secure that place which will be as we call the paradise. but you talk about your confrontation about an event that you mentioned in the counter where she interpreted her definition of modesty different than yo
i take a lot of solis and religion. sometimes i do most of my riding at five in the morning and i like to think that whole idea happens before sunrise. week up and try and work basically. if i don't get up to necessarily engage in prayer i still get up and engage in some sort of work and if it isn't my work as a writer media is my work in preparation even maintaining a healthy body and going out to the park and running, or may be preparing a meal for my children. i know that so many mothers do...
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Aug 18, 2014
08/14
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clause is to allow people in this country of different religions, including those with no religion to harmoniously together much to given that bestic purpose what do we do about the problem of prayer in these kind of legislative sessions? one possibility is say, you just can't do it, it's secular. but that is not our tradition. >> that's correct. >> the second possibility is the one that you are advocating, and it has much to recommend it, try to keep it knock denominational, as inoffensive to the others as possible. that's gentlemen upside. the downsize is seeing super seriesed bay judge, dozens of groups -- today there-60 or 70 goops of different religions coming in and saying, that doesn't work for us, this doesn't work and that's the nightmare they're afraid of. i mean, even in this town, or in the area, there's significant numbers as well as christians, jews muslims, hindus, and others. so, there's a third approach. that is to say you can't have them if there's any aspect of coercion. but we just saw people walking into the room, god save the united states, and you want to win yo
clause is to allow people in this country of different religions, including those with no religion to harmoniously together much to given that bestic purpose what do we do about the problem of prayer in these kind of legislative sessions? one possibility is say, you just can't do it, it's secular. but that is not our tradition. >> that's correct. >> the second possibility is the one that you are advocating, and it has much to recommend it, try to keep it knock denominational, as...
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May 26, 2014
05/14
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you will have people of different background, religions and race all of that, come into central -- you will be taught something. i'm not opposed to that idea. i think it is a very good thing but however what are they being taught? if it violates the faith and values and the beliefs of the significant number of people, who are paying through their taxes for this, they ought to be able to have the choice of sending their child to another school, public, private, religious, that more reflects those views. . . and am i just here to get an education, to make money, to buy stuff, is that going to make me happy, or do can i need a spiritual and moral dimension to buttress that, and i think that's what's missing in a lot of our government schools. >> host: and harvard is not a government school. >> guest: well, no -- >> host: you were talking about in the book don't send your kids to -- >> guest: harvard, dartmouth, princeton will all founded on biblical principles. you go there now, all of that's gone. i don't remember him, i remember him saying it, when he was president of harvard more than
you will have people of different background, religions and race all of that, come into central -- you will be taught something. i'm not opposed to that idea. i think it is a very good thing but however what are they being taught? if it violates the faith and values and the beliefs of the significant number of people, who are paying through their taxes for this, they ought to be able to have the choice of sending their child to another school, public, private, religious, that more reflects...
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Dec 26, 2014
12/14
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he behaved deeply in religion but he believed it was personal having religion in the public square and public life was divisive. for history sake he was on the court from 1956 to 1990. he participated in the decisions prohibiting school prayer and was vilified by the catholic church for doing so. he felt strongly enough about his views in those cases to write a separate 50 page conquering opinion in the second school prayer decisions in 1963 in the case and the school district that i was looking that over again today apropos of the question could we ever have an atheist on the court justice brennan in his opinion in 1963 talks about the establishment clause to the conclusion that the government and religion have to have discrete interests which are mutually best served when each avoids a proximity to the other. it is not only the nonbeliever that fears the injection of sectarian doctrines and controversies into the civil quality but it has high degree of is the devout believer that fears the creed which becomes too deeply involved in and dependent upon the government. that was the esse
he behaved deeply in religion but he believed it was personal having religion in the public square and public life was divisive. for history sake he was on the court from 1956 to 1990. he participated in the decisions prohibiting school prayer and was vilified by the catholic church for doing so. he felt strongly enough about his views in those cases to write a separate 50 page conquering opinion in the second school prayer decisions in 1963 in the case and the school district that i was...
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Jun 15, 2014
06/14
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and teaching of religion? >> welcome in college i began taking more history classes, and i became convinced that for 99% of human beings across the history of the human race religion has constituted one of if not the most important lens through which they interpreted the world. and if i wanted to understand history, i had no choice but to grapple with religion. i think i was also fascinated by this set of answers and this kind of access special orientation that was so different from my own command i explored fairly widely. i mean my first scholarly interests were not get in evangelical protestantism but eastern orthodoxy, which as a tradition that grew up in the east outside of the major effect and the major fight of the western enlightenment is a very different form of christianity that challenges so many western assumptions. but i spend time thing with a rather obscure community and i call them the russian on ash. they are a sectarian branch of rusher in orthodoxy called over the levers and alberta in colleg
and teaching of religion? >> welcome in college i began taking more history classes, and i became convinced that for 99% of human beings across the history of the human race religion has constituted one of if not the most important lens through which they interpreted the world. and if i wanted to understand history, i had no choice but to grapple with religion. i think i was also fascinated by this set of answers and this kind of access special orientation that was so different from my...
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Feb 18, 2014
02/14
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religion and i., religion plays a part here. it is a general rule, i found the category two-story to be the more interesting on the one where i could add value and that was where the bbc world service came into its own because it takes those longer formats with more airtime to allow the thought of space required to explain issues of identity sectarianism, religion or theology might or might not play a part in the story today. got to make many documentaries on anti-semitism in europe on the dalai lama and exiled tibetans on revolution and reform within islam, u.n. and elsewhere. that is in the year 2000 countless others that give me room to explore, asked the question and suggest one or two tentative answers. my thesis by the need to reform its runtime you ran was a couple of weeks later miserably undermined when many newspaper editors come a couple of whom i interviewed were jailed. even in terms of the news bolton's advocate the second slot on the story, when they give some context to the news piece about it. the domestic news
religion and i., religion plays a part here. it is a general rule, i found the category two-story to be the more interesting on the one where i could add value and that was where the bbc world service came into its own because it takes those longer formats with more airtime to allow the thought of space required to explain issues of identity sectarianism, religion or theology might or might not play a part in the story today. got to make many documentaries on anti-semitism in europe on the...
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Aug 23, 2014
08/14
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it is not a dead religion, but it is a dying religion. there are, i would say, maybe 250,000 left in the world. it's a dying religion because it's a religion that you can't convert to, and any religion that you can't convert to eventually dies out. a shame, because it is an important and historic religious tradition. >> host: bev corpswomen tweets in to you, why do religions seem to consistently degrade and persecute well? >> guest: because they are patriarchal institutionings. religions are man made, literally. all religions are manmade. and so when it comes time to interpret a religion, it's going to be interpreted in ways that benefit men. and, again, this is true of all religious traditions. >> host: and, in fact, you write in "no god but god," the origin's evolution, you write: the fact is that for 14 century ies quranic -- and because each one inevitably brings to the quran his own ideology and his own preconceived notions. it should not be surprising to learn that certain verses have most often been read in their most misogynyst in
it is not a dead religion, but it is a dying religion. there are, i would say, maybe 250,000 left in the world. it's a dying religion because it's a religion that you can't convert to, and any religion that you can't convert to eventually dies out. a shame, because it is an important and historic religious tradition. >> host: bev corpswomen tweets in to you, why do religions seem to consistently degrade and persecute well? >> guest: because they are patriarchal institutionings....
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Feb 16, 2014
02/14
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her husband, john, taught religion at temple university. they were the very picture of a golden couple. >> we had an 8-year-old, a 6-year-old and a 2-year-old. we were family folks who also wanted to keep another track active in our lives which was political activism. >> that activism attracted the attention of the fbi. its director, the powerful and feared j. edgar hoover, received the anti-war movement which ranged from radical revolutionaries to peaceful protesters as a threat to national security. >> at one rally i had one of my children on my back, and not only did they take my picture, but they took her picture. >> protesters like the raines became increasingly convinced the fbi was conducting a covert campaign against them, tapping their phones and infiltrating anti-war groups. >> we you the fbi -- we knew the fbi was systematically trying to squash the dissent. >> determined to get proof the fbi was crossing the line, fellow activist and physics professor william davadon hatched a plan. he reached out to the raines and six others in
her husband, john, taught religion at temple university. they were the very picture of a golden couple. >> we had an 8-year-old, a 6-year-old and a 2-year-old. we were family folks who also wanted to keep another track active in our lives which was political activism. >> that activism attracted the attention of the fbi. its director, the powerful and feared j. edgar hoover, received the anti-war movement which ranged from radical revolutionaries to peaceful protesters as a threat to...
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Mar 9, 2014
03/14
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her husband have religion at temple university. they were the picture of the golden couple. >> wieden 8-year-old comest extrude and 2-year-old. we were family folks who also wanted to keep another track active in our lives, which was political act to visit. >> that activism attracted the attention of the fbi, its director, the powerful and figured she had her have her receive the antiwar movement which claims from radical revolutionary to peaceful protesters as a threat to national security. >> at one rally i had one of my children on my back and not only did they take my picture, but they took their picture. >> protesters became increasingly convinced of the fbi was conducting a covert campaign against them, tapping phones in infiltrating antiwar groups. >> we know is systematically trying to squash the lifeblood of democracy. >> determined to give proof efp was crossing the line of activists in hannaford physics professor william avedon hatched a plan. he reached out to six others including a social worker, graduates duty in the
her husband have religion at temple university. they were the picture of the golden couple. >> wieden 8-year-old comest extrude and 2-year-old. we were family folks who also wanted to keep another track active in our lives, which was political act to visit. >> that activism attracted the attention of the fbi, its director, the powerful and figured she had her have her receive the antiwar movement which claims from radical revolutionary to peaceful protesters as a threat to national...
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Feb 18, 2014
02/14
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set of fall than the ways in which there was a sort of post religion religion involving a secular your. there was a lot of interest and that sort of thing. at think there is still in a very structured media environment in the traditional media there is this natural urge to go and seek out the authority structure. the authority, leaders, the voices over authority, when they are not there their left scratching their heads a little bit. also, i think there is a sort of ingrained bias against -- and that touched on it with this of the feeling that dobro when the end everything going on the internet, the sort of a new spirituality out there, that it is anti intellectual, that it really does not just find much knew space. there is a bit of that going on. sometimes when i was presenting a program i would be trusted to be a regular news journalist if i was interviewing the archbishop of canterbury, i would be expected to be putting the tough questions to him and would be just to do so, but if there was somebody else there who was a little bit more what do spirituality and was told to go really
set of fall than the ways in which there was a sort of post religion religion involving a secular your. there was a lot of interest and that sort of thing. at think there is still in a very structured media environment in the traditional media there is this natural urge to go and seek out the authority structure. the authority, leaders, the voices over authority, when they are not there their left scratching their heads a little bit. also, i think there is a sort of ingrained bias against --...
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Mar 23, 2014
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meaning what is your religion in response to the question is none. it doesn't mean you are atheist or agnostic but 20% of the public now and 33% of millennials say i have no religion. it doesn't mean they are atheist or agnostic. only a quarter of the group says that. it simply means they don't choose to be affiliated with any religious denomination and therefore they are not churched if you will. most of them believe in god in many of them still pray. many of them say they are spiritual in some way but a rising share particularly of young adults aren't comfortable with organized religion. that's a new trend but it is in the context of a country in terms of religion that is always searching always somewhat tolerant of new ways of doing its religious life. despite that trend it's not clear that religion is losing its hold on the american public. the share of americans who say they go to church every week actually hasn't moved down that much. where you really see the changes among that share of the public that has always been loosely attached to religi
meaning what is your religion in response to the question is none. it doesn't mean you are atheist or agnostic but 20% of the public now and 33% of millennials say i have no religion. it doesn't mean they are atheist or agnostic. only a quarter of the group says that. it simply means they don't choose to be affiliated with any religious denomination and therefore they are not churched if you will. most of them believe in god in many of them still pray. many of them say they are spiritual in...
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Mar 24, 2014
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impose a religion on the public as a whole. so these instincts have led to over the course of the 19th 19th century, as a young country, a settler country, we didn't have that many institutions but we built them quickly and built up a lot of religious institutions throughout the 19th and early 20th century. and we are today by far the most religious of any advanced industrialized country. a lot of people have made the argument that modernity leads to secularism, you see that certainly in europe, where you have these enormous empty cathead central, memory of the importance of religious in society and no longer. in america our situation is different. we remain very pluralistic. one of the things that has begun to happen and there's a chapter in the book called the rise of the nuns. >> none. >> guest: meaning what is your religion and the response to the question is, none. that doesn't mean you're athiest or agnostic but about 20% of the public now and 30% -- 33% of millenials say i have no religion. doesn't mean they're athiests
impose a religion on the public as a whole. so these instincts have led to over the course of the 19th 19th century, as a young country, a settler country, we didn't have that many institutions but we built them quickly and built up a lot of religious institutions throughout the 19th and early 20th century. and we are today by far the most religious of any advanced industrialized country. a lot of people have made the argument that modernity leads to secularism, you see that certainly in...
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May 3, 2014
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freedom of speech, freedom of religion and freedom of enterprise. but yet reagan could not have spoken as he did he could not even become president if those had not already forgotten or forsaken what made the greatest generation truly but of course, none of that we cannot afford to forget our democratic history as the late political scientists put people's memories that the measure of the freedom only when we remember what made the greatest generation and its leader truly great horror when we restore with the democratic lives and laborers will be really appreciate why we turn to them and honor them as we shed for only then will be remember who we are only then will we remember the old way to truly sustain the american democratic life then be but save the nation to make it once again fairly radical for a generation. think you i am told there are questions if you have them i am told the'e>óy5Ñ microphones you can ask a question go to the microphone so the recording can't pick you up. >> welcome to washington d.c.. >> football season. [laughter] has
freedom of speech, freedom of religion and freedom of enterprise. but yet reagan could not have spoken as he did he could not even become president if those had not already forgotten or forsaken what made the greatest generation truly but of course, none of that we cannot afford to forget our democratic history as the late political scientists put people's memories that the measure of the freedom only when we remember what made the greatest generation and its leader truly great horror when we...
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Dec 31, 2014
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is also about defending their bodies to practice that religion. finally, it is clear that bodies were large and barack obama's personal imagination. his father is absent oddi the bodies of dead children abortion protesters, the bodies of religious communities animate "the audacity of hope" and other key obama writings and speeches. obama danforth and back to disagree profoundly on the abstract notion of whether the notion is religious or christian or what that even means. but where they agree, where they could begin and what we may take from petitions of the 1770s the not just that everybody has a body to invoke martin luther king jr. but everybody is part of connected to other bodies. when we think a body sack in an abstracted ideology first we run the risk of putting intangibles before tangibles non-existence before existence. that was a problem these massachusetts petitioners, their families and their friends, they knew all too well. it may be a struggle to see bodies before ballots, to see bodies before budget to see bodies before beliefs. wha
is also about defending their bodies to practice that religion. finally, it is clear that bodies were large and barack obama's personal imagination. his father is absent oddi the bodies of dead children abortion protesters, the bodies of religious communities animate "the audacity of hope" and other key obama writings and speeches. obama danforth and back to disagree profoundly on the abstract notion of whether the notion is religious or christian or what that even means. but where...
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Jul 12, 2014
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to you your religion, to me my religion. indeed, as i said earlier, the quran over and over again calls jews and christians part of the uma, part of the larger community, what i refer to as monotheistic pluralism. it validates the torah and the gospels. but you wouldn't believe that, you wouldn't know that if you listen to a lot of muslims talk about kris chaps or jews -- christians or jews. this is the problem with scripture, is that it can mean whatever you want it to mean. why is it that we still pay attention to writings that were composed 5,000 years ago? it's not because they are true, although their truth has very little to do can with the facts that they espouse. it's because they are infinitely malleable. the torah addresses every aspect of the human condition. the same torah that says love your neighbor as yourself also says slaughter every man, woman and child that does not believe in yahweh. the same gospel that says turn the other cheek also says that jesus did not come to preach peace, he came to preach the swo
to you your religion, to me my religion. indeed, as i said earlier, the quran over and over again calls jews and christians part of the uma, part of the larger community, what i refer to as monotheistic pluralism. it validates the torah and the gospels. but you wouldn't believe that, you wouldn't know that if you listen to a lot of muslims talk about kris chaps or jews -- christians or jews. this is the problem with scripture, is that it can mean whatever you want it to mean. why is it that we...
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May 31, 2014
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the second thing is religions helped us because they create rules. the thing we don't do well are gray zones. when there is a gray zone we digress but not because we are bad people, but because we are people. there is a range of how to see things and it is more comfortable to see it this way and i would lean this way. if you are a fan of some basketball team and the referee calls against your team you can't help but see reality from the perspective of your team and the referee is evil and fishes or something. is not about being a bad person but having reasoning, you want to see the world in a certain way. having gray stones don't pay well with our cognitive ability. we can outsmart ourselves and the last thing about religion is about forgiveness. we did an experiment in which we gave people the opportunity to cheadle time and one thing we see is people cheetah little bit trying to balance, feeling good. at some point some people's which. we call the switching point the what the hell affect. at point at which you view yourself as good or bad in a bina
the second thing is religions helped us because they create rules. the thing we don't do well are gray zones. when there is a gray zone we digress but not because we are bad people, but because we are people. there is a range of how to see things and it is more comfortable to see it this way and i would lean this way. if you are a fan of some basketball team and the referee calls against your team you can't help but see reality from the perspective of your team and the referee is evil and...
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Feb 22, 2014
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look at the very different experiences women have in every society, because of law, work conditions, religion, or warfare, and education opportunities as well, this is a chance to make that the center of your research, and we cover just about everything. it's just like any other class where you take exams and write papers. >> host: what do you do with a women's study major? >> the short answer is law school. many of my best students gone on to be title ix lawyers. many go abroad. they work with women birth control the issue of violence against women in regions ranging from northern africa to bosnia. many students do development in term of non-profit. they do programming for everything from planted parenthood to organizations that work with women and girls. i have a couple of students who have gone on to med school and do specialties in women's health. quite a few have been nursing, and i have a lot of students who are also as athletes involved in furthering women sports. some are trainers. i have one in the olympics right now. i have another student interning at the winter games who is hoping
look at the very different experiences women have in every society, because of law, work conditions, religion, or warfare, and education opportunities as well, this is a chance to make that the center of your research, and we cover just about everything. it's just like any other class where you take exams and write papers. >> host: what do you do with a women's study major? >> the short answer is law school. many of my best students gone on to be title ix lawyers. many go abroad....
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Apr 14, 2014
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i also wanted to -- judaism is a shared religion. we are not a silent religion. it was noticed very early on how much chattering and stuff goes on, the twee are a religion. we made noise. from the beginning of the readings arthe readingsare publt loud so i wanted the spirits to give cameras to kids which is what we did in tel aviv they say go to the hospital, go to the school, go to kindergarten, send me two minutes in real-time with a little before and a little after and we will put it together. and, you know, i am not a critic quite rightly have my own work as well as on the written page, but i'm proud of this little piece, and it is what begins the fifth film, and pretty much the rest i think it speaks for itself. he is coming with a microphone i think for anybody that would like to. >> i would note two films. >> yes, let me wander. how many? do you have a question? joe? there is a gentleman there. >> the recent [inaudible] especially paris. stomach you're talking about canadians? connected a gentle man that was attacked after leaving the synagogue. >> host: a
i also wanted to -- judaism is a shared religion. we are not a silent religion. it was noticed very early on how much chattering and stuff goes on, the twee are a religion. we made noise. from the beginning of the readings arthe readingsare publt loud so i wanted the spirits to give cameras to kids which is what we did in tel aviv they say go to the hospital, go to the school, go to kindergarten, send me two minutes in real-time with a little before and a little after and we will put it...
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Apr 27, 2014
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judaism is a communal shared religion. we are not a silent religion. it was noticed very early on how much chattering and goes. but we are a religion. we make noise to signal we are live. from the beginning, from the time they are public and communal and vocalized out loud. so i wanted in a sub spirit to gave cameras to kids in film schools which is what what we did in tel aviv and say go to a hospital. the troop barracks, go to his school, film two minutes in real-time. film a little before had a little after it will put it together. you know, i am my worst critic quite rightly of my own work in film by solace on the written page. but i'm quite proud of this little piece. it is what the kids the fifth film and pretty much the rest i think speaks for itself. let's hear from you. he's coming with mike for anybody wanting to. while a kurd, i suppose. why not. >> how many clicks okay. he's got a question? yes, there's the gentleman there. there we go. [inaudible] >> you thinking about the comedians? >> and thinking about the gentleman who was attacked lea
judaism is a communal shared religion. we are not a silent religion. it was noticed very early on how much chattering and goes. but we are a religion. we make noise to signal we are live. from the beginning, from the time they are public and communal and vocalized out loud. so i wanted in a sub spirit to gave cameras to kids in film schools which is what what we did in tel aviv and say go to a hospital. the troop barracks, go to his school, film two minutes in real-time. film a little before...
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Apr 13, 2014
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. >> host: kate bowler is a professor of religion at due to the profanity school. she is the author of this book "blessed" a history of the american prosperity gospel published by oxford. next on booktv president jimmy carter talks about human rights abuses against women around the world and discusses what can be done about the problem. this is a little over an hour. [applause] >> mr. president. >> it's good to see you. hi everybody. >> so mr. president, women as you have pointed out in your book do not fare very well in most religions around the world and at best they are second class citizens and at worst they have been imprisoned and enslaved, tortured, raped, beaten, murdered. i have had a lot of women say to me over the past years that i've done on faith, how could god let this happen? does god hate women? how could you answer that question? >> the abuse of women was in a past tents. it's still going on around the world and in the united states as well. i would say that god does not hate women. i happen to be a christian and it would be a fruitless search to l
. >> host: kate bowler is a professor of religion at due to the profanity school. she is the author of this book "blessed" a history of the american prosperity gospel published by oxford. next on booktv president jimmy carter talks about human rights abuses against women around the world and discusses what can be done about the problem. this is a little over an hour. [applause] >> mr. president. >> it's good to see you. hi everybody. >> so mr. president, women...
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Jul 15, 2014
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i raised my children on the knees of the religion. they are religious guys, honest and clean handed, and their goal is to bring the victory of islam madam president, contrast those two statements. one, serious law enforcement responding to the wrongful murder of a teenager and the other a society that celebrates, that glorifies, that lionizes vicious criminals who kidnap and murder innocent teenagers. further highlighting the contrast is the fact that the murderers of muhammad abul khadir were apprehended in less than a week. the israeli police moved and moved expeditiously. almost a month after the abduction of naftali gilad nyal, their hamas murderers are still at large because they are being protected by those that consider them heroes rather than terrorists. when mr. gordon asserted in his speech that israel's -- quote - "military control of another people for recurring instability and for embolding extremists were to blame for the region's problems, they ignore the fact that the palestinian authority bears the real responsibility
i raised my children on the knees of the religion. they are religious guys, honest and clean handed, and their goal is to bring the victory of islam madam president, contrast those two statements. one, serious law enforcement responding to the wrongful murder of a teenager and the other a society that celebrates, that glorifies, that lionizes vicious criminals who kidnap and murder innocent teenagers. further highlighting the contrast is the fact that the murderers of muhammad abul khadir were...
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Jun 8, 2014
06/14
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religion. and so a lot of us who were both gay activists but who started writing gay and lesbian history, the last thing that was on our minds was religion because we were leaving religion behind and it was not on the road to our liberation. meanwhile, for instance if you look at chicago gay history gay and lesbian history, one of the things that hit me in the face when i started reading the gay and lesbian press in chicago from the 1970s for research purposes is how much, how many stories there were about religion in the press in the '70s. and how, you know, this was totally went beyond my own life experience but how many lgbt folks were passionate about religion and were organizing separate churches or within their own churches. and one of the interesting things is that okay, so a whole group of queers would get together on a sunday afternoon for an alternative service or a wednesday evening service or a friday evening for a service. and many of the most liberal churches were located in the l
religion. and so a lot of us who were both gay activists but who started writing gay and lesbian history, the last thing that was on our minds was religion because we were leaving religion behind and it was not on the road to our liberation. meanwhile, for instance if you look at chicago gay history gay and lesbian history, one of the things that hit me in the face when i started reading the gay and lesbian press in chicago from the 1970s for research purposes is how much, how many stories...
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May 24, 2014
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it was about religion which is inherently interesting subject, a new religion on the american continent but it's a very violent story, obviously. some of you may or may not know, joseph smith is murdered essentially in cold blood why an angry mob. it's a violent incident that takes place on the american frontier, which i certainly wouldn't have nothing to started researching the book. the settlement of the united states ended of the mississippi river what joseph smith decide to found his colony in far southwestern illinois. there was no state to the west of where he settled his colony. there was the iowa territory. missouri was to the west but it wasn't across the more smith was, so smith had moved his people sort of this nation as far away as possible from the seat of american power. i will get to that when i resume all history in four minutes. but it was a wild and lawless area. of course, you don't think of illinois that way, but this was the far reaches of the united states. abraham lincoln fought the indians there in 1830. it was a wild pleased to another reason that i don't think
it was about religion which is inherently interesting subject, a new religion on the american continent but it's a very violent story, obviously. some of you may or may not know, joseph smith is murdered essentially in cold blood why an angry mob. it's a violent incident that takes place on the american frontier, which i certainly wouldn't have nothing to started researching the book. the settlement of the united states ended of the mississippi river what joseph smith decide to found his colony...
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Apr 27, 2014
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they have a worldview that comes from basically a fundamentalist reading of their religion whether its orthodox catholic or evangelical protestantism. it's not that they are anti- woman or they their misogynist. they believe that women's proper role is first as a mother and a wife. you have ones like sarah palin who is like if you can cover the mother and wife and then you can also be vice president, great but it's always premised on this is the god-given role of women. now that's their view and i think if we want to understanunderstand what this political fight is about we have do you know understand their view and i guess i would say to millennials eyes see it fairly politically motivated. there was apparently a stampede to get into c. heller hudson at ucla. literally a stampede. all the students were telling me about it and there were six they they -- amazing excitement about the idea of the first woman president and by the way that is the sequel to this book so keep an eye out for that in 2015. so i think if we can have a discussion with these young people about this is what is mot
they have a worldview that comes from basically a fundamentalist reading of their religion whether its orthodox catholic or evangelical protestantism. it's not that they are anti- woman or they their misogynist. they believe that women's proper role is first as a mother and a wife. you have ones like sarah palin who is like if you can cover the mother and wife and then you can also be vice president, great but it's always premised on this is the god-given role of women. now that's their view...
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Mar 1, 2014
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else's religion over my religion. chris and this is a 0 sum game. if the government isn't celebrating recognizing legion at all then you are denigrating religion. i tend to disagree with that. i think actually there is a middle ground where the government can be neutral about religious issues, not disparaging religion on one side but also not promoting religion on the other side. one thing we have to keep in mind as we are the most religiously diverse nation on earth. as many as 1600 different faith groups and religious traditions within the united states. more muslims in america than presbyterians, episcopalians, baptists, catholics and methodists. they are right there. we are seeing of great religious diversity within this nation and we need to ensure that no one feels they are not a full participant for citizen because of their religious beliefs. that is quite easy for me as a protestant to say. no one should be offended by certain representations of my face because to me it is normal and so accepted but there are
else's religion over my religion. chris and this is a 0 sum game. if the government isn't celebrating recognizing legion at all then you are denigrating religion. i tend to disagree with that. i think actually there is a middle ground where the government can be neutral about religious issues, not disparaging religion on one side but also not promoting religion on the other side. one thing we have to keep in mind as we are the most religiously diverse nation on earth. as many as 1600 different...
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Sep 3, 2014
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and any religion -- [applause] any religion, we have to defined religion. so if we defined religion as a set of values and morals to live by, if a religion condemns those who believe in it to death, the rights to practice in america will be null and void. [applause] that is only way we can either reform islam, we have to get rid of that, and we can judge it, judge islam by the way muslims practice in america by the way. we have to judge islam how it is being practiced in iran and saudi arabia. wherever islam is majority there is tyranny. when they're in the minority they admit it, even the koran. when you're in the minority, lie and slander and accept, and act like, like you like peace. so you're dealing with a religion that teaches lying is a virtue. >> islam is notoriously hostile to people who renounce their ideology. you must be a real thorn in their side. have you personally experienced violence or threats? >> oh, yeah. i have a fatwa on me to die if i go to egypt. and that is why i can't visit. the only country i can visit in the middle east is israel
and any religion -- [applause] any religion, we have to defined religion. so if we defined religion as a set of values and morals to live by, if a religion condemns those who believe in it to death, the rights to practice in america will be null and void. [applause] that is only way we can either reform islam, we have to get rid of that, and we can judge it, judge islam by the way muslims practice in america by the way. we have to judge islam how it is being practiced in iran and saudi arabia....
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Sep 13, 2014
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the bohemian approach to religion was self-religion: throw off organized religion and all that custom and ritual that the--the bourgeois liked, all the traditional values and enter a realm of pure freedom, just have these experiences on the beach at dawn, sort of new age self-exploration. but a lot of the people who threw that off in the '60s and '70s discovered, 'well, you can have a lot of peak experiences at dawn looking at the pacific ocean, but it doesn't add up to a whole lot.' and they discover that it's very hard to pass that down to your kids, that sort of spirituality so a lot of those people are going back into religion, going back into organized religion. there was a great new york times headline that captured this, religion makes a comeback (belief to follow). and so it's an attempt to have the roots and rituals of organized religion at the same time you have the freedom and flexibility to choose what parts of the organized religion you're going to obey. i ran into a rabbi in montana who--they asked him, 'well, what sort of rel--judaism do you practice? is it conservative
the bohemian approach to religion was self-religion: throw off organized religion and all that custom and ritual that the--the bourgeois liked, all the traditional values and enter a realm of pure freedom, just have these experiences on the beach at dawn, sort of new age self-exploration. but a lot of the people who threw that off in the '60s and '70s discovered, 'well, you can have a lot of peak experiences at dawn looking at the pacific ocean, but it doesn't add up to a whole lot.' and they...
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Nov 30, 2014
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and the study of religion and conducted in religious language. with religion so steeped in tribalism and things that maybe are outmoded, do you think that it can still serve as the place to discuss those moral issues that are pressing, or do you think we need to move past that and have a new forum that's not at strongly, strongly steeped in the tribal competition? >> well, i think the major goal of philosophy, maybe religion as well, in the future is self-understanding. and you just touched on an area where science and humanities could actually come together in a very meaningful way. that's very much on the minds of a lot of scholars. that's how we can bring science and the humanities together. and what would we mean by self-understanding? and that's why i use the word "meaning." meaning in this case is to the, to understand the meaning is to go past history which began really about the origin, about the time of the origin of literacy. to go past it and on into prehistory, into the lives and the activities and the development of intelligence and
and the study of religion and conducted in religious language. with religion so steeped in tribalism and things that maybe are outmoded, do you think that it can still serve as the place to discuss those moral issues that are pressing, or do you think we need to move past that and have a new forum that's not at strongly, strongly steeped in the tribal competition? >> well, i think the major goal of philosophy, maybe religion as well, in the future is self-understanding. and you just...
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Jul 16, 2014
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of her employer, the religion her employer practices. not on what she and her doctor determine is best for her from a medical perspective. the religion of the employer trumps the recommendation of a physician to a woman. and this is just a step that changes the whole relationship twean an vipped and their country -- between an individual and their country. if a corporation's insurance doesn't cover any contraception because all contraception, all contraceptives violate the employer's religious beliefs, then the employee's religious views are especially burdened. she will have to pay for contraception out of her own pocket. and that's after the average woman already makes 77 cents on the dollar to a man. 77 cents. unless you're an african-american woman, when it's 66 cents on the dollar. or unless you're a latina woman where it's 59 cents on the dollar that a white makes in the united states of america. and the hobby lobby case, the supreme court transformed religion from a personal choice into a corporate decision, and the corporation ca
of her employer, the religion her employer practices. not on what she and her doctor determine is best for her from a medical perspective. the religion of the employer trumps the recommendation of a physician to a woman. and this is just a step that changes the whole relationship twean an vipped and their country -- between an individual and their country. if a corporation's insurance doesn't cover any contraception because all contraception, all contraceptives violate the employer's religious...
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Dec 22, 2014
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in china the religion is gone. communism is gone as religion. the religion since deng xiaoping in the late '70s, the religion has been get rich, make money. it's all good to make money and now that's all slowing down. so there is no glue that's holding them together except nationalism, except the chip on your shoulder of we used to be great. we're great again. why does any but recognize that what you are starting to see it in territorial expansion. so where they're headed i think is a place where they're going to a lot of internal domestic problems. not just demographics, not just aging population but expansionism. last time somebody in a part of the world tried that, japan. the other parts of that region can ease asia, southeast asia, asia writ large are kind of weak and couldn't challenge it. but i think china does this without having real blowback from countries in the region who can either militarize, nuclearized, or challenge the chinese. so my concern on the rising china, do you prevent and a rising china from the an aggressive rising chin
in china the religion is gone. communism is gone as religion. the religion since deng xiaoping in the late '70s, the religion has been get rich, make money. it's all good to make money and now that's all slowing down. so there is no glue that's holding them together except nationalism, except the chip on your shoulder of we used to be great. we're great again. why does any but recognize that what you are starting to see it in territorial expansion. so where they're headed i think is a place...
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Jul 20, 2014
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and i think that this fed into his freedom of religion people can believe whatever religion or no religion into his strong support for freedom of conscience and nobody should have to believe anything if he or she thinks is wrong. that idea liberated him and i think helped to liberate us all because he lied the way for freedom of conscience for intellectual freedom more than any other founder including jefferson. >> would have been to the autobiography? that he not finish it? >> no, he didn't. it's just a draft. he will write and say, would you tell me something about yourself and his fellow wanted to publish them and so he started the autobiography, but he did not finish it. subsequently he decided not to talk about his epilepsy because it was so demonized that he decided it was just more trouble than it was worth at the end of his presidency. >> he still had his amazing presidency. >> i really do think that seeing him as having complex partial seizures explains in between he was perfectly well and full of energy. so it's just phenomenal. >> don't you love dolly? well, she was beautiful an
and i think that this fed into his freedom of religion people can believe whatever religion or no religion into his strong support for freedom of conscience and nobody should have to believe anything if he or she thinks is wrong. that idea liberated him and i think helped to liberate us all because he lied the way for freedom of conscience for intellectual freedom more than any other founder including jefferson. >> would have been to the autobiography? that he not finish it? >> no,...
115
115
Jan 19, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 115
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we have to keep a constant eye not on people because of their politics or their religion. not on people because of their ethnic background. but we have to keep an eye on people, insiders and outsiders, right? because insiders are just as dangerous. not having a security clearance even makes you not an i kept on you as edward snowden will fantastically reveal. those 1.4 million americans with top secret clearances like edward snowden are going to be the most surveyed people in america because every key stroke on a computer and log on and every place they are is going to be now more and more secure. that builds the infrastructure of what looks at the rest of us. there might be people who insist on drinking unpasteurized milk. there might be people here who utalize illegal substances. this is another one. the patriot act lays out what disequalifies you. mental defective -- i don't know if they use that word. but they have it in the law. of the 45,000 people only six were found to be mentally defective. but i am thinking what is the database of them? because i must be on that
we have to keep a constant eye not on people because of their politics or their religion. not on people because of their ethnic background. but we have to keep an eye on people, insiders and outsiders, right? because insiders are just as dangerous. not having a security clearance even makes you not an i kept on you as edward snowden will fantastically reveal. those 1.4 million americans with top secret clearances like edward snowden are going to be the most surveyed people in america because...
23
23
Nov 14, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 23
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look have freedom of religion. courts don't probe what religion is or why it is important not because it is obvious by any means. so what the court does it is a concept of religion that robb does of many different roles. accepted in the island rare circumstance and congress, the same approach. coming to information and privacy the best working concept that encompasses all of the important interests that privacy serves is control of the information. this concept avoid aids the why and that's how. and to the state-controlled the papers they are secure enough. if not she is not. with that ramifications' to control mightily what one shares of with whom the to share with my mother or a close childhood friend but that does not mean i have chosen to share that with the entire world include the nsa. sure they could wrap to meet out that might chop said fred has the problem i did not know about and could be an informant but the downside risk that my confidence and babied misplaced with the disclosures to everyone in the upp
look have freedom of religion. courts don't probe what religion is or why it is important not because it is obvious by any means. so what the court does it is a concept of religion that robb does of many different roles. accepted in the island rare circumstance and congress, the same approach. coming to information and privacy the best working concept that encompasses all of the important interests that privacy serves is control of the information. this concept avoid aids the why and that's...
31
31
May 24, 2014
05/14
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we are not a silent religion [laughter] but we make new ways -- noise to signal but our readings are public. so i wanted in the spirit to give carries to kids in film schools to go to a hospital or a barracks or a school or kindergarten and film to minutes in realtime a little before and a little after and we put it together. i am the worst critic quite rightly have whale work but -- of my own work but it is what begins the film and pretty much the rest speaks for itself. now we have the microphone for anybody who would like. >> why not? >>. >> you think about the comedian? >> the gentleman that was attacked? >> with the fascination. >> but with the larger pattern of anti-semitism? can you comment? >> it is monstrous deplorable atrocity. with a terrific night mayor it does not indicate that there are thousands of people who are prepared to kill children. and maniacs really. it is true they don't pick racial groups but as i said early on if there is of problem, yes, there is us saying that french kids cannot go into the street with the yarmulkes. but it is not been other parts of euro
we are not a silent religion [laughter] but we make new ways -- noise to signal but our readings are public. so i wanted in the spirit to give carries to kids in film schools to go to a hospital or a barracks or a school or kindergarten and film to minutes in realtime a little before and a little after and we put it together. i am the worst critic quite rightly have whale work but -- of my own work but it is what begins the film and pretty much the rest speaks for itself. now we have the...